60 "ntTj !! rUt H" -::.. ......... -....... .., fB', 0 0 cr .., I I' I o' é - - '\" . - -- : ',1';:....\ , ;1 I , " \. II. [11:111 ...: I H.. ,.,/Ì I , ; "I. il. 1m l \'. ' : f' The \.. John Murray Anderson.. Robert Milton School of the Theatre and Dance 128..130 East 58th Street C"+-!} THE ONLY SCHOOL OF ITS KIND IN AMERICA C"+..9 Embracing Every Phase of the Theatre and Featuring - INDIVIDUAL SUPERVISION INSTRUCTION BY PRESENT LEADERS IN THE PROFESSION COOPERATION OF PROMINENT MANAGERS AND PRODUCERS Six Distinct Courses DRAMA MUSICAL COMEDY DANCING STAGE DIRECTION AND MANAGEMENT SCENIC AND COSTUME DESIGNING PLAYWRITING FACULTY, COUNCIL AND LECTURERS John Murray Anderson Robert Milton Blanche Bates Madame Pilar-Morin Frederick Stanhope Augus us Barratt James Light Robert E. Locher Bertram Bloch Clark Robinson Charlton Andrews Herman Rosse Richard Bennett John Webster Harkrider Frank Reicher Livingston Platt David Burton Alexander Gavrilov Frank Lea Short Madame Serova Don Marquis Martha Graham Channing Pollock Troy Kinney Robert Edmond Jones Dorothy Lee Christopher Morley Capt. F. G. McPherson J. Hartley Manners Leon Barte James Reynolds Michio !tow Helen Dryden M. Clerk- Jeannotte Irving Berlin Guthrie McClintock Mrs. Fiske Edgar Selwyn Elisabeth Marbury Crosby Gaige Elsie de Wolfe John Alden Carpenter Margaret Illington Efrem ZimbaIist Margaret Anglin Rida Johnson Young Alma Gluck May Irwin Sam H. Harris Jerome Kern Messmore KendaH Holbrook 'Blinn Major Edward Bowes Otis Skinner Richard Herndon Henry Miller Winchell Smith Otto Harbach Georg. Brown Harbeson Mrs. Stuart Benson For Information apply to HUGH ANDERSON 128- 1 30 EAST 58TH ST. Phone Plaza 4524 g>UZANN / the honors of the old world, if she defeats Miss Wills she will have beaten three champions of the United States badly. It is the obvious time for her to retire. Her health, as those who know her are well aware, is not of the best, and every year she is less able to undertake the rigors and hardships of a tennis campaign. The chance of beating the great Suzanne is passing from the hands of the American for that they meet again is improbable! M EANWHILE tennis goes mer- rily on; things get by, which to put it mildly would even cause the eyes of Mr. Red Grange of Illinois to open wide; but do not forget that we are all amateurs. Most assuredly. Only occasionally one meets a skeptic who seems to doubt it.-J. R. T. . POEM ABOUT DOGS Till a dog breeder has taken a cup he's ardently busy in tending his pup- pIes. Quits he perusing both Cabell and Gibbon-all for the sake of a segment of ribbon. LIfe cannot be, he says, gayer or mer- rier-raising a bloodhound, a bull-dog or terrier. Goes he to dog shows both haggard and worried-crates he in dogs that are fine-combed and curried. A judge in a morning coat studies and puzzles over the angles of f ore- heads and muzzles. Crowds peer in cages of eight, say, or say nine-fat ladies rave over each single canine. I'd never go of my private volition to any such silly and dull exhibition. -P. G. W. THE NEW YORKER The Old Lad y from Dubuque Has Been to See Us! Why Don't You Come in Yourself? "tE very thing in Music" on Easy Payment Terms OPEN EVENINGS day linns LANDAY HALL s. W. Corner 42nd St. and 6th Ave. . DANCING TO Larry Siry's Orchestra is simply following a leader with a following! T he Ambassador Grill Dinner Dancing Supper Dancing . 7:30 to IO:30 II:Ij to Closing - -W / , " 1'1 · ] _ ./'.0/'/0 ,It. , {j14. I ;r I'- Y ä , ' CJhe Ambassador :New Yor ..s Premier Hotel PARK AVENUE AT flat STREET